Skidmore College
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This page serves as a linkway to various
online aids, including images, websites, and grammars.
Perhaps the best online classics resource
is the Perseus Project at Tufts
University, which boasts a comprehensive collection of texts and images.
The collection is so extensive, that it is possible to construct an entire
Resources page with links to nothing but Perseus! You should take
the time to explore this wonderful resource.
Below are links to sites other than Perseus.
Most are very good—but there are a few clunkers.
Enjoy, and if you discover other resources,
please email me.
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Texts
Private
Life. An electronic collection of texts on Greek and Roman private
life, focusing primarily on women. This is chapter 7 of Women's
Life in Greece and Rome, a virtual edition of a book by Professors
Mary Lefkowitz and Maureen B. Fant.
]
De
Feminis Romanis. More texts on women, this time only Roman.
What is more, the texts are in Latin (some vocabulary and notes provided).
Part of the Diotima
website.
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Art / Architecture
Museum
Portraits. An online gallery of portraits of Roman men and women
from various museums. The gallery is part of the World
Art Treasures website, which is funded by the renowned Jacques-Eduoard
Berger Foundation, and hosted by the École Polytechnique Fédérale
de Lausanne.
Pompeii:
Houses, Gardens, and Paintings. A useful, if brief, tour of a
typical Pompeiian house. Written by Professor Mark Morford (whom
you may know from his textbook, Classical Mythology) of the University
of Virginia, this page is part of the UVA Instructional
Technology Group, which is dedicated to the marriage of computer technology
and the classroom.
Villa
of the Mysteries. A detailed tour of the Villa of the Mysteries
in Pompeii by Mr. James Jackson of Johnson County Community College in
Overland Park, KS.
Images
of Pompeii and Images
of Herculaneum. Many photos of these two ancient cities by Professor
Leo C. Curran of SUNY Buffalo. These are but two sections of his
massive Maecenas
site, which is devoted to architectural images from all around the ancient
world.
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Websites
Technically, every link above is to a website, or at least a portion
thereof. But here are some links to the front pages of more
comprehensive sites.
—and—
NewhallNet.
Not a Classics website at all, NewhallNet is a celebration of a run-down
college apartment and the "Boys" who lived there. Yet it is a model
site for this class, relevant for its recreation of private life, its superb
interface and design (note esp. the apartment floorplans), and its overall
cohesion. Look carefully, you might see someone you know.
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Last modified 2 April 1999
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